ROLO Operations System
Lesson 4: Dispatch Daily Workflow & Route Sequencing
This lesson defines exactly how ROLO dispatchers operate daily. The goal is control, speed, and visibility — not reacting to problems, but preventing them.
ROLO Rule
Dispatch controls the day. If dispatch is organized early, the operation runs smooth. If not, the entire day becomes reactive.
Step 1: Start-of-Day Dispatch Control
Where: Review Orders + Dispatch Screen
What to do (every morning)
- Open saved profile: Unassigned Orders
- Open saved profile: At Risk Deliveries
- Review all new orders for the day
- Confirm:
- Correct service type
- Correct vehicle type
- Pickup & delivery times make sense
- Assign every order OR flag issue immediately
Why this matters
If orders sit unassigned, dispatch loses control. Every order should have a plan early in the day.
Step 2: Build Routes (Before Dispatching Individually)
Where: Distribution → Route Builder
What to do
- Select Data Source:
- Open Orders (for same-day work)
- Scheduled Runs (for recurring routes)
- Select Delivery Center
- Filter by:
- Service type
- Vehicle type
- Geographic area
- Load orders
- Group orders by:
- Geographic area
- Service type
- Create routes BEFORE assigning drivers
Why this matters
Dispatching one order at a time creates inefficiency. Routing groups work together and reduces miles, time, and cost.
Step 3: Sequence Routes
Where: Route Builder → Sequence Routes
What to do
- Select the built route
- Click Sequence Routes
- Let system optimize stop order
- Review sequence for:
- Time windows
- Service priorities
- Fix any exceptions manually
- Apply final sequence
Why this matters
Sequencing ensures drivers follow the most efficient stop order. Without sequencing, drivers waste time and miles.
Step 4: Dispatch Routes to Drivers
Where: Dispatch Screen
What to do
- Assign full route to driver (not individual stops)
- Use drag-and-drop OR assign via driver selection
- Confirm driver:
- Is active
- Has correct vehicle type
- Is in correct geographic area
- Confirm route appears in driver board
Why this matters
Dispatching routes instead of single orders creates structure and reduces dispatcher workload throughout the day.
Step 5: Monitor Drivers on Dispatch Map
Where: Dispatch Map
What to watch
- Driver location
- Route progress
- Last POD time
- Idle drivers
- Overloaded drivers
What to do
- Rebalance work if a driver is overloaded
- Move orders if another driver is closer
- Call drivers if status is unclear
- Fix problems BEFORE they become late deliveries
Why this matters
Dispatch map gives real-time control. This is where ROLO prevents failures, not reacts to them.
Step 6: Midday Control Check
What to do (every 1–2 hours)
- Check At Risk Deliveries
- Check late pickups
- Check driver delays
- Reassign work if needed
- Notify customers BEFORE issues occur
Why this matters
Midday control prevents service failures and protects customer trust.
Step 7: End-of-Day Closeout
Where: Review Orders
What to do
- Open profile: Missing POD
- Contact drivers for missing deliveries
- Confirm all deliveries are completed
- Review flagged orders
- Ensure orders are ready for billing (no issues)
Why this matters
No POD = no invoice. End-of-day cleanup ensures ROLO gets paid and avoids billing delays.
Lesson 4 Completion Standard
Dispatch is considered optimized when routes are built first, sequenced correctly, drivers are monitored in real-time, and no orders are left unassigned or without POD at end of day.